Yemenofficially Republic of Yemen, Arabic Al-Yaman, or Al-Jumhūrīyah al-Yamanīyah, country situated at the southwestern corner of the Arabian Peninsula.

Most of Yemen’s northern frontier with Saudi Arabia traverses the great desert of the peninsula, the Rubʿ al-Khali (Empty Quarter), and remains undemarcated, as does the eastern frontier with Oman. In the west and the south, Yemen is bounded by the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, respectively. Yemen’s uncharted desert marches make its precise land area impossible to determine. Its territory includes a number of islands as well, including the Kamaran group, located in the Red Sea near Al-Ḥudaydah; Perim (Barīm), in the Bab el-Mandeb, which separates the Arabian Peninsula from Africa; the most important and largest island, Socotra (Suqutrā), located in the Arabian Sea nearly 620 miles (1,000 kilometres) east of Aden; and The Brothers, small islets near Socotra.

Yemen’s uncharted desert marches make its precise area impossible to determine. Most observers suggest a figure of about 156,000 square miles (405,000 square kilometres); the area of Socotra is 1,400 square miles.

The present Yemen came into being in May 1990, when the former Yemen Arab Republic, or North Yemen, merged with the former People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen, also called South Yemen. By stipulation of the reunification agreement of 1990, Ṣanʿāʾ, formerly the capital of North Yemen, functions as the political capital of the new nation, while Aden, formerly the capital of South Yemen, functions as the economic centre.

The history, culture, economy, and population of Yemen have all been influenced by the country’s strategic location at the southern entrance of the Red Sea—a crossroads of both ancient and modern trade and communications routes. In the ancient world, the states that occupied the area known today as Yemen controlled the supply of such important commodities as frankincense and myrrh and dominated the trade in many other valuable items, such as the spices and medicines of Asia. Because of its fertility as well as its commercial prosperity, Yemen was known in the ancient world as Arabia Felix (Latin: “Fortunate Arabia”) to distinguish it from the vast forbidding reaches of Arabia Deserta (“Desert Arabia”).

The two components of the Yemen Republic underwent strikingly different historical evolutions: North Yemen never experienced any period of colonial administration at the hands of a European power, while South Yemen was a part of the British Empire from 1839 to 1967. The contemporary borders are the consequence of British, Ottoman Empire, and Saudi Arabian foreign policy goals and actions, some of which date to the 18th and 19th centuries. These have had a substantial impact on many aspects of 20th-century Yemen.